Survival of salmonella in pig carcasses in slaughterhouses

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Date
2019Author
Kureljušić, Jasna
Tasić, Aleksandra
Žutić, Jadranka
Kureljušić, Branislav
Spalević, Ljiljana
Vidaković, Suzana
Ljubojević, Dragana
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Salmonella has been widely recognized as themost important
zoonotic pathogen with health and economic impact on animals and humans. It is
one of the major bacterial causes of gastroenteritis worldwide.The microrganism
may also be transmitted through a direct contact with infected animals or faecalcontaminated
environments and humans. The most common symptom of nontyphoidal
Salmonella infection is acute gastroenteritis. The objectiveof this
experiment was to determine the status of Salmonella on pig carcasses at
aslaughterhouse. For Salmonella detection, samples were analysed according to
ISO 6579:2008 and positive samples were serotyped by Kauffman-White-Le-
Minor technique. The presence of Salmonella spp. after stunning was determined
in 41% of the carcasses (100 carcasses were examined) while after processing,
Salmonellawas confirmed in 2% of the tested carcasses. Detection of Salmonella
after stunning was within a range of 0 to 90%, during ten weeks of sampling. After
processing, Salmonella was isolated only in two carcasses both originating from
the third week of the study.